We are proud to announce that version 1.99.1 of pygtkmvc has been
released.
Project homepage:
http://apps.sourceforge.net/trac/pygtkmvc/wiki
Download:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/pygtkmvc/
==
About pygtkmvc
==
pygtkmvc is a fully Python-based implementation of the
We are proud to announce that version 1.99.1 of pygtkmvc has been
released.
Project homepage:
http://apps.sourceforge.net/trac/pygtkmvc/wiki
Download:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/pygtkmvc/
==
About pygtkmvc
==
pygtkmvc is a fully Python-based implementation of the
On 30 Dez., 00:11, Terry Reedy tjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/29/2010 4:06 PM, jmfauth wrote:
On 29 Dez., 21:14, Terry Reedytjre...@udel.edu wrote:
On 12/29/2010 2:31 PM, Terry Reedy wrote:
Changed in version 3.2: Allowed use of Windows and Mac newlines. Also
input in 'exec' mode does
Hi everyone,
I'm just beginning to learn python language and i'm trying to do something and i
can't figure it out.
I want to test if a file exists but my path contain a directory name that
differs from a server to another.
In shell i would have done something like that :
#!/bin/bash
Hello,
2010/12/30 smain...@free.fr:
How can i do the same thing (wildcard in a directory name) in python please ?
You can get the contents of a directory with os.listdir and filter
with fnmatch.fnmatch more or less as in the example from the
documentation:
-
import fnmatch
Selvam, 30.12.2010 08:30:
I have some HTML string which I would like to feed to BeautifulSoup.
But, One malformed attribute breaks BeautifulSoup.
p style='terp_header' wrong_tag=' text1 ' text2 ' and 'para' '
class='terp_header' My String/p
Didn't try with BS (and you forgot to say
On 30Dec2010 09:36, smain...@free.fr smain...@free.fr wrote:
| I want to test if a file exists but my path contain a directory name that
| differs from a server to another.
| In shell i would have done something like that :
| #!/bin/bash
| mypath=/dire*/directory02/
| myfile=filename
| myfile=toto
smain...@free.fr wrote:
I'm just beginning to learn python language and i'm trying to do something
and i can't figure it out.
I want to test if a file exists but my path contain a directory name that
differs from a server to another.
In shell i would have done something like that :
On Tue, 2010-12-28, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
On Tue, 2010-12-28 at 03:25 +0530, Anurag Chourasia wrote:
Hi All,
I have a requirement to digitally sign a XML Document using SHA1+RSA
or SHA1+DSA
Could someone give me a lead on a library that I can use to fulfill
this requirement?
Jorgen Grahn, 30.12.2010 10:41:
If you really *do* have a requirement to make the result XML-like and
incompatible with anything else, I'm afraid you're on your own
Well, there's always xmlsec if you need it.
http://www.aleksey.com/xmlsec/
Stefan
--
Hi Ppl,
I'm trying to use python for a macro recorder. In short I have a windows
based application, which has a macro recorder. The macros are captured as a
python script and when the script is executed they accomplish the user
action done on my application. I've written python scripts that can
Hi Cameron,
Ok, i'll try that :)
Thanks
Smaine
Selon Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au:
On 30Dec2010 09:36, smain...@free.fr smain...@free.fr wrote:
| I want to test if a file exists but my path contain a directory name that
| differs from a server to another.
| In shell i would have done
Hi, I'm writing a test tool to simulate Web browser. Is there anyway
to run JavaScript in python? Thanks in advance.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 29, 7:48 pm, Octavian Rasnita orasn...@gmail.com wrote:
First, the interface should look exactly as the native interfaces for each
system named, and it should provide the same features, because otherwise the
interface would look strange for all the users on all the operating systems.
In article
a05193b8-46cd-4d17-a8d4-fb9106d3a...@n32g2000pre.googlegroups.com,
crow wen...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi, I'm writing a test tool to simulate Web browser. Is there anyway
to run JavaScript in python? Thanks in advance.
The answer to the question you asked is, Probably. You might want
On 12/29/10 6:58 PM, rantingrick wrote:
The answer is simple. We need a 100% Python GUI. A GUI coded in Python
from top to bottom. A GUI that is cross platform to the big three
(Windows, Linux, and Mac). A GUI that not only is easy as Tkinter but
also a GUI that can be manipulated by the average
Am 30.12.2010 14:52, schrieb crow:
Hi, I'm writing a test tool to simulate Web browser. Is there anyway
to run JavaScript in python? Thanks in advance.
See PyV8: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyV8
Regards,
Martin
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Dec 30, 8:59 am, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
On 12/29/10 6:58 PM, rantingrick wrote:
Any GUI framework is going to require at least some heavy lifting in C,
C++ or Objective-C (depending on the platform). A pure-Python approach
to GUI development is technically infeasible.
On Thursday, December 30, 2010 9:59:09 AM UTC-5, kw wrote:
Any GUI framework is going to require at least some heavy lifting in C,
C++ or Objective-C (depending on the platform). A pure-Python approach
to GUI development is technically infeasible.
--
Kevin Walzer
Code by Kevin
rantingrick, 30.12.2010 00:58:
So what should we do?
The answer is simple. We need a 100% Python GUI. A GUI coded in Python
from top to bottom. A GUI that is cross platform to the big three
(Windows, Linux, and Mac). A GUI that not only is easy as Tkinter but
also a
On 12/30/10 10:24 AM, rantingrick wrote:
On Dec 30, 8:59 am, Kevin Walzerk...@codebykevin.com wrote:
On 12/29/10 6:58 PM, rantingrick wrote:
Any GUI framework is going to require at least some heavy lifting in C,
C++ or Objective-C (depending on the platform). A pure-Python approach
to GUI
On 12/30/10 10:28 AM, Hank Fay wrote:
On Thursday, December 30, 2010 9:59:09 AM UTC-5, kw wrote:
Any GUI framework is going to require at least some heavy lifting in C,
C++ or Objective-C (depending on the platform). A pure-Python approach
to GUI development is technically infeasible.
--
In article mailman.61.1291152972.2649.python-l...@python.org,
Valery Khamenya khame...@gmail.com wrote:
However it doesn't look possible to use it to initialize each Pool's
worker with some individual value (I'd wish to be wrong here)
So, how to initialize each multithreading Pool worker with
On 12/30/10 10:52 AM, Stefan Behnel wrote:
rantingrick, 30.12.2010 00:58:
So what should we do?
The answer is simple. We need a 100% Python GUI. A GUI coded in Python
from top to bottom. A GUI that is cross platform to the big three
(Windows, Linux, and Mac). A GUI that
On Dec 30, 9:52 am, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
I hope you invested as much time into writing this expose as you did
searching the web before writing it.
And ditto to you. If you would have followed the thread so far, in my
second post i said...
However i need to stress that my
rantingrick, 30.12.2010 17:02:
On Dec 30, 9:52 am, Stefan Behnel wrote:
I hope you invested as much time into writing this expose as you did
searching the web before writing it.
in my second post i said...
However i need to stress that my intention is towards a 100% Python
GUI. Not a
These days, Tkinter has pretty much everything that other GUI toolkits
have: tree views, multi-column listboxes, plus all the basics, available
through the core widget, the themed ttk widgets, or extension packages.
***Today, there's no excuse for developing an ugly Tk GUI--if a new Tk
app
On Thu, 2010-12-30 at 08:01 -0800, Aahz wrote:
In article mailman.61.1291152972.2649.python-l...@python.org,
Valery Khamenya khame...@gmail.com wrote:
However it doesn't look possible to use it to initialize each Pool's
worker with some individual value (I'd wish to be wrong here)
So, how to
On Dec 30, 9:51 am, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
Tcl is not a domain-specific language for creating GUI's. Tcl is a
full-featured, general-purpose programming language that is a peer to
Python in its capabilities,
Anybody can gloat and gush about their favorite programming
On Dec 30, 10:02 am, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python_gui/
This library isn't much different from other Python GUI toolkits--it's
dependent on underlying, rather large, platform-specific
implementations--but it provides an even
Octavian,
Not all the people were happy because the darkness disappeared partially for
some of them and more and more blind people started to use a computer, and
discovered that the Tk interfaces are absolutely inaccessible for them.
Might this package help? (I have no experience with this
That (the desktop app issue) was the big game-change for me. It looks like a
desktop app, it acts like a desktop app, and our enterprise customers would be
delighted to a) have no installs to do for fat clients; or b) not have to run a
TS or Citrix farm.
--
From: pyt...@bdurham.com
Subject: Tkinter accessability options (was Re: Tkinter: The good, the bad, and
the ugly!)
Octavian,
Not all the people were happy because the darkness disappeared partially for
some of them and more and more blind people started to use a computer, and
There's some_object.some_method.func_defaults and
some_function.func_defaults both are a settable attribute. How to set
the methods func_defaults? You'd have to have code in
_getattribute__(yourmethod) if not __getattr__(yourmethod)
def __getattribute__(self, attr):
if attr == self.my_method:
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 07:24:04 -0800, rantingrick wrote:
Also one could argue that C and Python are very similar.
One could also argue that black is white, that diamond is softer than
chalk, and that bananas are a type of spaceship. Doesn't make it so.
How to add two numbers in C:
#include
On 12/30/2010 10:51 AM, Kevin Walzer wrote:
In 2010, Tk only lacks two major features common to GUI toolkits:
1. A cross-platform printing API. This is mainly an issue on Windows,
which lacks a rich command-line printing framework. The canvas widget
can generate PostScript,
Uh.
1. Postscript
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 11:26:50 -0800, DevPlayer wrote:
There's some_object.some_method.func_defaults
Not quite -- method objects don't expose the function attributes
directly. You need some_object.some_method.im_func to get the function
object, which then has a func_defaults attribute.
and
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 07:24:04 -0800, rantingrick wrote:
Also one could argue that C and Python are very similar.
One could also argue that black is white, that diamond is softer than
chalk, and that bananas are a type of spaceship. Doesn't make it so.
How to add
Hi,
I am writing some multithreaded code which aims to automate three
sequential data processing applications and distribute the processing
on my 16GB RAM, 64 bit Ubuntu box running Python 2.6.5
The basic class that orchestrates these jobs use Queue.Queue() to feed
the product of the first job
At 03:46 PM 12/30/2010, harijay wrote:
Hi,
I am writing some multithreaded code which aims to automate three
sequential data processing applications and distribute the processing
on my 16GB RAM, 64 bit Ubuntu box running Python 2.6.5
The basic class that orchestrates these jobs use
On 12/30/10 12:36 PM, rantingrick wrote:
On Dec 30, 9:51 am, Kevin Walzerk...@codebykevin.com wrote:
Tcl is not a domain-specific language for creating GUI's. Tcl is a
full-featured, general-purpose programming language that is a peer to
Python in its capabilities,
Anybody can gloat and
On 12/30/2010 4:46 PM, harijay wrote:
OSError: [Errno 26] Text file busy error
Searching 'errno 26', the third Google response suggests that you are
trying to write to a file (especially an executable or shared library?)
that is already in use. Perhaps just trying to read when locked will
On Dec 30, 1:51 pm, Steven D'Aprano steve
+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
How to add two numbers in C:
[...snip code example...]
None of the three are exactly clones of each other, but it seems to me
that Tcl and Python are quite close in spirit, if not syntax.
Yes i'll agree to that
On Dec 30, 4:44 pm, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
You can build web servers, database tools, FTP clients, test
suite/automation tools, chat clients, and drivers of other CLI tools
with Tcl, just to name a few.
Ok, thats swell. But do you have any real examples, links, or some
On Dec 30, 4:24 am, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
In article 87k4irhpoa@benfinney.id.au,
Ben Finney ben+pyt...@benfinney.id.au wrote:
Roy Smith r...@panix.com writes:
I've got a problem that I'm sure many people have solved many times.
Our project has a bunch of python scripts
rantingrick schrieb:
On Dec 29, 6:41 pm, Gerry Reno gr...@verizon.net wrote:
wxPython looks good but I don't see anyone developing support for things
like smartphones.
No wx is not the answer to our problems
Rather: ... to *your* problem...
Also, what do you think about frameworks
I am writing to a unique script file . Each script file has prefixes
like script1.sh script2.sh and they reside in different directories .
The scripts will never trample each other since they are all
sequential and shell scripts and no directory will have more than one
shell script.
The only
On 12/30/10 6:17 PM, rantingrick wrote:
Ok, thats swell. But do you have any real examples, links, or some
evidence of this? Or are we witnessing more wishful thinking?
http://tcl.apache.org/rivet/
http://www.amsn-project.net/
http://thecoccinella.org/
On 2010-12-30 13:04:19 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 10:02 am, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python_gui/
This library isn't much different from other Python GUI toolkits--it's
dependent on underlying, rather large,
On 2010-12-30 11:02:46 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 9:52 am, Stefan Behnel stefan...@behnel.de wrote:
I hope you invested as much time into writing this expose as you did
searching the web before writing it.
And ditto to you. If you would have followed the thread so far, in my
second
On 2010-12-30 18:12:21 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 1:51 pm, Steven D'Aprano steve
+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
How to add two numbers in C:
[...snip code example...]
None of the three are exactly clones of each other, but it seems to me
that Tcl and Python are quite close
On Dec 30, 6:32 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
Exactly how is Tcl too limited in your view?
Well Robert if have explain to you why C and Python make Tcl look
limited by comparison then explaining will probably do neither of us
any good. But if you think Tcl is so great by all means go spend
Hello Matt,
On 2010-12-23 01:03, Matt Funk wrote:
i was wondering whether someone can point me whether the following
already exists.
I want to connect to a server , download various files (for whose name i
want to be able to use a wildcard), and store those files in a given
location on the
In article ff3a2b89-2586-43d2-ae5a-490384687...@32g2000yqz.googlegroups.com,
mpnordland mpnordl...@gmail.com wrote:
First, to pacify those who hate google groups: What is a good usenet
client?
trn3.6 ;-)
--
Aahz (a...@pythoncraft.com) * http://www.pythoncraft.com/
Think of
For those that are lurking, this might provide a little background:
http://journal.dedasys.com/2010/03/30/where-tcl-and-tk-went-wrong
Essentially, there is nothing wrong with Tcl and Tkinter. They are
part of a long evolutionary chain of how we got to where we are today.
They deserve to
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 12:15 AM, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
However i need to stress that my intention is towards a 100% Python
GUI. Not a binding, not a wrapping (except for OS calls!) but a *real*
Python GUI. The only thing that i know of at this point is pyGUI
although there
Big chance in Management careers. Careers recruitment in Management
work. http://topcareer.webs.com/executivemanager.htm
http://topcareer.webs.com/executivemanager.htm
Government Jobs in site lot of opportunities for graduates.
http://rojgars1.webs.com/gov.htm
On 2010-12-30 19:43:21 -0500, Gerry Reno said:
For those that are lurking, this might provide a little background:
http://journal.dedasys.com/2010/03/30/where-tcl-and-tk-went-wrong
Essentially, there is nothing wrong with Tcl and Tkinter. They are
part of a long evolutionary chain of
On 2010-12-30 19:46:24 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 6:32 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
Exactly how is Tcl too limited in your view?
Well Robert if have explain to you why C and Python make Tcl look
limited by comparison then explaining will probably do neither of us
any good.
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 13:46:35 -0800, harijay wrote:
[...]
But I get the same OSError: [Errno 26] Text file busy error
Everytime I run the same job queue a different part of the job fails.
Unfortunately I dont see anybody else reporting this OSError. ANy help
in troubleshooting my newbie
On Dec 30, 6:43 pm, Gerry Reno gr...@verizon.net wrote:
For those that are lurking, this might provide a little background:
http://journal.dedasys.com/2010/03/30/where-tcl-and-tk-went-wrong
That was a great and thought provoking article Gerry. Thanks!
--
Latest job listing with IT manager job search and government jobs
http://topcareer.webs.com/itmanagement.htm
Are you looking for a job in government, this is the right place to
start.
http://rojgars1.webs.com/gov.htm http://printmediajobs.webs.com/fl.htm
--
On Dec 30, 7:54 pm, Katie T ka...@coderstack.co.uk wrote:
It's very hard to write a good gui framework, very very few people
have managed to do it well.
This is a very good point Katie. Creating a Python GUI is a huge
undertaking and it will take much time to work out the bugs. A truly
On Dec 30, 8:41 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2010-12-30 19:46:24 -0500, rantingrick said:
Just to clarify...I like Python. I am learning it at the moment.
Glad to have you aboard Robert!
3. What is your opinion of Tkinter as to it's usefulness within the
stdlib?
No, I really
On 12/30/2010 10:28 PM, rantingrick wrote:
Hmm, wxPython is starting to look like the answer to all our problems.
WxPython already has an IDE so there is no need to rewrite IDLE
completely. What do we have to loose by integrating wx into the
stdlib, really?
In the spirit of batteries
On 2010-12-30 22:06:57 -0500, rantingrick said:
What is your opinion (or anyone) on wxPython?
Ok, I am curious again. Have you even tried wxPython or PySide/PyQt?
--
Robert
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On 2010-12-30 22:44:52 -0500, Gerry Reno said:
On 12/30/2010 10:28 PM, rantingrick wrote:
Hmm, wxPython is starting to look like the answer to all our problems.
WxPython already has an IDE so there is no need to rewrite IDLE
completely. What do we have to loose by integrating wx into the
On 2010-12-30 22:28:39 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 8:41 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2010-12-30 19:46:24 -0500, rantingrick said:
Just to clarify...I like Python. I am learning it at the moment.
Glad to have you aboard Robert!
Thanks!
3. What is your opinion of
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 23:04:33 -0500, Robert wrote:
The
second way the Tcl community irks me is the not invented here
attitude. I like the syntax of Tcl and I like the community. They are
some good folks. Try asking I want to build a Nagios clone in Tcl type
question and invariably you get
On Dec 30, 9:44 pm, Gerry Reno gr...@verizon.net wrote:
In the spirit of batteries included, Python needs to have something
in the stdlib as far as gui. But it cannot be overwhelming.
Agreed!
The problem with wx is that it is BIG. And so if we want something like
wx to be in the stdlib
On Dec 30, 9:51 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
Ok, I am curious again. Have you even tried wxPython or PySide/PyQt?
Yes i have used wxPython on a few projects and was very happy with the
feature rich nature of it. I found previously (with Tkinter) i would
have to build my own compound
On Dec 30, 11:24 pm, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
The problem with wx is that it is BIG. And so if we want something like
wx to be in the stdlib then it would have to be refactored so that there
was a small basic wx that was part of stdlib and then import
On Dec 30, 10:04 pm, Robert sigz...@gmail.com wrote:
wxPython is really good. The downside is that is shows (or did show)
its C++ roots.
Well i will admit the api is not as simplistic as Tkinter. However i
noticed over time that wx had started adopting a slight Tkinter feel
to the API and that
On Dec 30, 10:41 pm, Adam Skutt ask...@gmail.com wrote:
On Dec 30, 11:24 pm, rantingrick rantingr...@gmail.com wrote:
Exactly! All we need to do is replace the existing Tkinter with a
small sub-set of wxPython widgets that mirrors exactly what we have
now...
Toplevel
Label
Entry
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 13:46:35 -0800, harijay wrote:
Each Thread receives a dynamically generated shell script from some
classes I wrote and then runs the script using
subprocess.call([shell_script_file.sh])
But I get the same OSError: [Errno 26] Text file busy error
Text file busy aka
Hi,
I stumbled on a small bug with httplib2 that I reduced to the example below.
It seems that with Python 3, when an exception is handled it unbound the
previously declared local variable. This did not occurs with Python 2.5.
It is a Python 3 feature? I did not find anything in the what's news,
Hey all... I just started with Python, and I chose Python3 because it
seemed a subtle choice as compared to doing Pthon 2.x now and then
porting to Python3.x later... I plan to start with Web Development
soon... I wanted to know what all web frameworks are available for
Python3... I heard the
On 2010-12-30 12:36:05 -0500, rantingrick said:
On Dec 30, 9:51 am, Kevin Walzer k...@codebykevin.com wrote:
Tcl is not a domain-specific language for creating GUI's. Tcl is a
full-featured, general-purpose programming language that is a peer to
Python in its capabilities,
Anybody can gloat
Martin v. Löwis mar...@v.loewis.de added the comment:
Actually, it looks like PEP 3131 and the Language Reference [1] still
disagree. The latter says:
identifier ::= id_start id_continue*
which should probably be
identifier ::= xid_start xid_continue*
instead.
Interesting.
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
Hearty +1. I have the hope of putting this in 3.3, and for that I'd like to
see how the code matures, which is much easier when in version control.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
Arguably, it is not a bug if codec's decode method rejects unicode
strings with a TypeError.
Agreed, but it would be better if it did so deliberately and explicitly, rather
than as a result of a bogus forward-port ;)
--
Georg Brandl ge...@python.org added the comment:
I think the proposal is that fixing this minefield can wait until
Python 3.3 (or even 3.4, or later).
That is what I was thinking. (Alex: You might not know that Martin
was the main proponent of non-ASCII identifiers, so this assessment
should
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
Normally you should never call __del__, OTOH the issue is the same with a class
like::
class A:
def close(self):
self.close()
def __del__(self):
self.close()
The problem is not with _infinite_ recursion,
Amaury Forgeot d'Arc amaur...@gmail.com added the comment:
Precision: with new-styles classes (or py3k) the limit is
PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL-2. This does not change anything to the problem.
--
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
New submission from rheise ralfhe...@freenet.de:
Python's readline library generates out of the choices provided by a custom
completion function the wrong terminal input. Say, the completion function
suggests 'foobar' and 'foobaz' as matching completion strings, readline should
produce the
Patrick W. p...@borntolaugh.de added the comment:
Nick Coghlan (ncoghlan) at 2010-12-29 08:46 (UTC):
No, the context must always be included unless explicitly suppressed.
Then there should be some actually working way to suppress it, right?
I think the standard behaviour that automatically
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
There are open issues for specific modules: #8808 for imaplib, #8809 for
smtplib.
In 3.2, poplib already has support for SSL contexts, as do ftplib, http.client
and nntplib. If I'm missing a module please tell me.
--
resolution: -
Changes by Mark Roddy markro...@gmail.com:
--
keywords: +patch
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file20193/py27.patch
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10786
___
Changes by Mark Roddy markro...@gmail.com:
Added file: http://bugs.python.org/file20194/py32.patch
___
Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue10786
___
Mark Roddy markro...@gmail.com added the comment:
All patches change the default value of stream to None in the constructor, and
set it to the current to sys.stderr if the argument is None. Unit tests
included to check this behavior.
Also, the patch against Python 3.1 adds the
Gregory P. Smith g...@krypto.org added the comment:
FWIW, the example pasted in the bug was the smallest one he could come up
with. in reality we were never calling .__del__() explicitly. We ran into
the problem due to a __del__ method triggering a __getattr__ call and the
__getattr__ ending up
Dave Malcolm dmalc...@redhat.com added the comment:
For reference, this seems to affect SWIG, specifically, I'm seeing build
failures using:
/usr/share/swig/2.0.1/python/pycontainer.swg
from swig-2.0.1
See downstream build failure report for znc, which uses swig to generate python
3
Alexander Belopolsky belopol...@users.sourceforge.net added the comment:
I wonder if the issues raised here can be neatly addressed by applying NFKC
normalization before string to number conversion. This will convert full-width
variants to ASCII and also eliminate digit/decimal differences.
Éric Araujo mer...@netwok.org added the comment:
Alright, let me change my opinion: Let’s replace the Vim files by a README.vim
file explaining where to get good helper files (like Misc/README.emacs added in
r85927). Then I will learn how to manage my Vim configuration to keep it
updated
Éric Araujo mer...@netwok.org added the comment:
I’ve recently remarked that -i maps to both sys.flags.inspect and
sys.flags.interactive. Is this behavior useful?
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nosy: +eric.araujo
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Raymond Hettinger rhettin...@users.sourceforge.net added the comment:
using `None` as the cause of an exception would be the
best solution in my opinion:
+1
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
http://bugs.python.org/issue6210
Antoine Pitrou pit...@free.fr added the comment:
using `None` as the cause of an exception would be the
best solution in my opinion:
+1
We are talking about context, not cause.
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Python tracker rep...@bugs.python.org
Éric Araujo mer...@netwok.org added the comment:
The depth parameter idea sounds like YAGNI, so let’s stay with a recurse
boolean :)
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assignee: - eric.araujo
nosy: -BreamoreBoy, misc_from_metz
stage: unit test needed - patch review
versions: +Python 3.3 -Python 3.2
Matthew Barnett pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com added the comment:
The project is now at:
https://code.google.com/p/mrab-regex/
Unfortunately it doesn't have the revision history. I don't know why not.
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Michael Foord mich...@voidspace.org.uk added the comment:
Committed to py3k in revision 87582.
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http://bugs.python.org/issue10786
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